Doris A. and Lawrence H. Budner collection on Theodore Roosevelt

A Guide to the Collection

Lawrence and Doris Budner spent over twenty years amassing a collection of books, periodicals, pamphlets, photographs, and ephemera related to the twenty-sixth president of the United States, Theodore Roosevelt. They began donating their collection to Southern Methodist University in the 1980s. In addition to periodicals from the era of Roosevelt’s presidency, the collection contains records from the Budners’ activities in the Theodore Roosevelt Association, as well as from exhibitions and events on Roosevelt. Also related is the Budners’ collections of Roosevelt books and photographs; these items are not listed here, but are also open for research use.

Lawrence and Doris Budner’s interest in Theodore Roosevelt began in 1979 when Mr. Budner read The Rise of Theodore Roosevelt, the Pulitzer Prize-winning biography of the twenty-sixth President of the United States written by Edmund Morris. As the couple later recounted, the origins of their Roosevelt collection began when Mr. Budner purchased a first edition copy of T.R.’s autobiography during a trip to San Francisco.

Lawrence Hyman Budner, who worked as a bank executive at the First National Bank in Dallas, was born in 1930 and attended the University of Texas at Austin before transferring to Southern Methodist University, where he received a B.B.A. in banking and finance in 1951. After his retirement from banking, Budner earned a Master’s degree in history from S.M.U. in 1990. Upon receiving his B.B.A., Budner began working for the First National Bank, became an assistant cashier in 1957, vice president in 1962, and senior vice president and trust officer in 1970. Budner opted for early retirement in 1987 upon the merging of First National with Republic Bank of Texas, also located in Dallas. Budner was a member of Temple Emanu-El, in addition to being a founder and president of Temple Shalom, both in Dallas; he also served on the boards of organizations such as the Baylor Health Care System Foundation, the Dallas Jewish Coalition for the Homeless, and Hebrew Union College.

Budner’s M.A. thesis—not surprisingly, on Theodore Roosevelt—explored the ways in which T.R.’s experiences living in the American West in the 1880s influenced his later outlook upon government efforts to promote social uplift. "In this prodigiously researched study," as S.M.U. history professor Tom Knock has said, Budner "advanced a new and important interpretation of the meaning of that chapter in T.R.’s life for the White House years—and in a way that no other Roosevelt biographer had ever done before." Professor Knock continued, "Hal Williams [also of the SMU history department] and I served as his thesis advisers, and neither of us was in the least surprised when Lewis Gould, the distinguished historian at the University of Texas who served as Larry’s outside reader, said to him after his thesis defense, ‘We now consider you a professional historian.’"

Budner identified Roosevelt as the leading spokesman of the Progressive movement in the early years of the 20th century. He argued that T.R.’s time in the West was crucial in shaping his views about "the common man" and the importance of the Progressive movement, especially regarding conservation and women’s rights.

Budner’s wife of over forty years, Doris Albert Budner, was a native of San Antonio and a 1953 graduate of S.M.U. She was active in Dallas area civic organizations in addition to her Theodore Roosevelt-related interests and activities. She worked with the Dallas Jewish Coalition for the Homeless, the Dallas Association of Services to the Homeless, the All-Faith Coalition, and the Dallas Commission on Children and Youth.

Doris married Lawrence Budner in 1950, and the couple had three sons, Craig, Bruce, and Keith. She was recognized for her charitable activities, and received the J.C. Penney Golden Rule Award in 1989, the Foley’s/Dallas Morning News Savvy Award in 1995, and the National Association of Social Workers’ Public Citizen of the Year Award in 1999, as well as being twice recognized by the Dallas City Council.

Both were members of the Theodore Roosevelt Association, established by Congress to perpetuate the memory of Roosevelt "for the benefit of the people of the United States and the world." Mr. Budner served as president of the organization. In addition, the Budners took part in ceremonies for the Commissioning of the U.S. Navy’s aircraft carrier, the U.S.S. Theodore Roosevelt, in 1986.

The Budners acquired everything related to Roosevelt that they could find: books, periodicals, pamphlets, teddy bears, ephemera, and photographs detailing Roosevelt’s life, presidency, and times. The Budners donated about 4,000 items of their Roosevelt collection to the S.M.U. DeGolyer Library in a series of annual gifts from the 1980s until 2007.

Doris Budner died on June 18, 2003, and Lawrence Budner died on November 11, 2008.

Lawrence and Doris Budner’s fascination focused on one of the most colorful figures in American history, albeit one whose presidency proved controversial both then and today. Theodore Roosevelt became the 26th President of the United States in September 1901, following the assassination of President William McKinley. T.R. was elected to a full term in 1904, and the major themes of his presidency included the advancement of progressive reform at home and an assertive—even jingoistic—foreign policy, most notably in relations with Latin America.

Theodore Roosevelt was born October 27, 1858 in New York City to Theodore and Martha Bulloch Roosevelt. Theodore Sr. and his family enjoyed an affluent lifestyle, although this was more due to inherited wealth than it was to his business savvy. The vigorousness and vitality that his son displayed in later years were all traits he acquired with hard work; his childhood was marked by asthma and other health problems. Roosevelt’s intellectual interests included poetry and history (especially natural history), and he took up activities such as hiking, hunting, and boxing to improve his health—activities which he pursued his entire life.

Roosevelt attended Harvard, graduating in 1880. That same year, he married Alice Hathaway Lee and later attended Columbia Law School. Although he had entered college intending to become a natural scientist, his interests gradually turned to politics (his senior thesis was entitled, "Practicability of Giving Men and Women Equal Rights"), and he was elected as a Republican to the New York state assembly in 1881 at only 24 years of age, and was twice reelected.

Roosevelt’s close identification with the American West began with an 1880 hunting trip, but it grew unexpectedly deeper in 1884 upon the sudden death of both his wife and mother. Alice Roosevelt died shortly after giving birth to their first child in February 1884, only a few hours after T.R.’s mother died of typhoid fever. Deeply saddened, Roosevelt returned to his duties in the state assembly; later that year, he embarked on an extended trip to what was then the Dakota Territory. His adventures, which included hunting and operating two cattle ranches in the West, became the subject of a book, "Hunting Trips of a Ranchman," published in 1885.

He returned to New York in 1886, where he ran in (and subsequently lost) the city’s mayoral election. He renewed his friendship with Edith Carow, a childhood friend; they became engaged in 1885 and married the following year. The Roosevelt family included Alice Roosevelt by Theodore’s first wife, four sons, and another daughter.

Roosevelt’s loss of the 1886 New York mayor’s race was merely a temporary setback in his rising political career. Republican President Benjamin Harrison appointed Roosevelt to the Civil Service Commission as a reward for his work on behalf of the party in the 1888 presidential election. His reputation as a reformer grew, and his work in undermining the power of political parties to hand out government jobs, in favor of merit-based appointments, attracted favorable attention across party lines. Returning Democratic President Grover Cleveland decided to keep Roosevelt at the Commission in 1893.

At the same time, Roosevelt managed to maintain cordial enough relations with Republican Party bosses that his pursuit of higher office was not hindered by his criticism of the corrupt, machine-style political practices that were attracting increasing criticism by the late 1800s. While he opted not to make a second run for mayor of New York in 1894, Roosevelt nonetheless benefitted from the Republican who did capture the race for city hall, by being appointed a city police commissioner in 1895. As historian Lewis L. Gould described his activities on the commission, "Roosevelt stamped his personality on the city…he went with his face covered through Manhattan’s streets at night to find policemen sleeping on their beats or passing time in saloons. His teeth and pince-nez eyeglasses became public trademarks."

Roosevelt, having spent enough time in city and state politics by 1896, turned to national politics. His work on behalf of, and contacts with, national Republican leaders—as well as other party leaders’ interest in getting him out of their hair—both worked in his favor. Newly-elected Republican President William McKinley brought him to the Department of the Navy in Washington in 1897 as assistant secretary.

Roosevelt served as assistant secretary of the navy for only one year, but during that time he effectively ran the department, as the navy secretary was frequently out of town. He also advocated the buildup of the U.S. Navy, through the creation of a modern navy of steam-powered battleships to compete with European navies. Concurrently, Roosevelt supported overseas American expansion and welcomed a war with Spain in order to gain territory; he commented to one friend, "I wish to heaven we were more jingo about Cuba and Hawaii!"

War with Spain came in 1898, and although it was a brief war with more American casualties from disease than from enemy bullets, Roosevelt gained notoriety from his wartime exploits in Cuba with the famed Rough Rider regiment, following his resignation as assistant navy secretary and entry into the armed forces. Serving as a lieutenant colonel with 1,000 men under his command—newly-minted soldiers whose previous occupations ranged from cowboy to Ivy League-educated patricians—Roosevelt arrived in Cuba in June 1898. A minor battle with the Spanish two days later was followed by a daring charge on July 1 against enemy forces up Kettle Hill (erroneously reported later as San Juan Hill).

Although his celebrated wartime service was grounded at least as much in myth as it was in reality, he garnered much positive attention upon his return home, and the dividends from his newly-acquired status of war hero included the Republican gubernatorial nomination for 1898. Cultivating New York Republican party leaders by assuring them that he would not alienate them by striking out on a radically independent course, he won the election, although narrowly. During his two year tenure as governor, Roosevelt managed the delicate act of keeping party bosses at least mollified, while still working for conservation measures and regulation of big business. This included scaling back the influence of big business in government and the courts and utilizing publicity and the force of his personality in exposing the seedier side of the corporate world.

Republicans who were opposed to Roosevelt-style reform attempted to defuse him by giving him a new job in 1900. McKinley, running for a second term, needed a new vice president. Party officials, upset with Roosevelt’s willingness to sponsor reforms in New York, thought that electing Roosevelt vice president was the easiest way to remove him as a source of irritation. The vice presidency—hardly a prize for any ambitious politician—seemed a safe place for the New York governor, although some thought that his nomination posed a risk. In a phrase that would be ruefully quoted by some and humorously quoted by others long afterward, Republican political advisor and Senator Mark Hanna feared, "Don’t any of you realize that there’s only one life between that madman and the Presidency?"

The presidency became Roosevelt’s by an assassin’s bullet in September 1901, six months after becoming vice president. He was, at 42, the youngest man ever to become president. His time in office coincided with both the growing presence of the United States in world affairs and the beginnings of what has been called the "modern presidency."

Far from being a weak or passive chief executive who chose to yield the policymaking initiative to Congress, as had been the case for much of the 1800s, Roosevelt instead turned the White House into the center of power in the federal government. The expectation that the president should actively lead—and the equally consequential belief that the federal government should work to remedy the social and economic problems of society—began converging during his presidency. He actively pressed Congress to undertake progressive reform legislation and did not hesitate to utilize the power of the press to achieve his objectives, and to satisfy the widespread public interest in him and his family.

In domestic affairs, Roosevelt took up the cause of progressive reform. His progressivism was born, in part, of the pragmatic conviction that the excesses of capitalism imperiled capitalism itself, and that the government should step in to remedy at least the worst of industrialization’s effects upon American society. He was still a progressive, however, and believed that the solution to the increased power of big business was an increase in the powers of government to regulate. In 1903 Roosevelt demanded, and Congress passed, legislation establishing a Bureau of Corporations to expose and investigate unfair corporate practices. In a response to widespread complaints of excessive and discriminatory railroad rates, Roosevelt signed the Hepburn Act in 1905, which gave the federal Interstate Commerce Commission the power to set shipping rates.

Following public outcry—and his own personal disgust—at the revolting practices of the meatpacking industry publicized by such works as Upton Sinclair’s "The Jungle," the President passed the Meat Inspection Act to establish regulations for how meat could be processed and sold. The Pure Food and Drugs Act placed upon food and drug producers the responsibility of providing truthful information about their products.

Beyond the passage of progressive legislation, the Roosevelt administration also initiated antitrust litigation to break up excessively large companies. The creation of the Northern Securities Company in 1901 to control a large portion of the nation’s railroad lines led the government to file a lawsuit seeking to break up the organization. Use of the judicial system to break up corporate trusts resulted in over forty government-initiated lawsuits during the Roosevelt presidency.

Having spent so much time in the outdoors, Roosevelt was an ardent proponent of conservation efforts, and he established several wildlife refuges and turned over 100 million acres of land into national parks and forests. Other lands were declared off limits to private companies, and the federal government also initiated irrigation projects under the Newlands Act.

Roosevelt’s domestic activities were considered overbearing by some and insufficient by others, but his foreign policy was seen by many as imperialistic. Determined to project American power in the Western Hemisphere, Roosevelt actively intervened in the affairs of neighboring states. The Monroe Doctrine had declared the Americas closed off to new colonization by Europe, as well as to any attempt to subvert the independence of countries in the hemisphere. Roosevelt built his own declaration (the "Roosevelt Corollary") on top of that in 1904 by asserting that the United States retained the right to intervene—even militarily—within the Americas to ensure stability and protect American interests.

In a dispute between England, France, and Venezuela over unpaid Venezuelan debt, which threatened to spark military conflict, Roosevelt dispatched the navy to the Caribbean as a reminder to all of his intent to enforce his corollary. American troops were sent to Alaska to help ensure a favorable result of a disagreement with the British over the boundary between Alaska and Canada. The President kept out of inter-European affairs, and in Asia he scored a notable diplomatic success by negotiating the Treaty of Portsmouth, ending the Russo-Japanese War. Roosevelt received the Nobel Peace Prize for his work in ending that conflict.

What was arguably the most controversial foreign policy maneuver by the Roosevelt administration occurred in Columbia and Panama over the issue of the construction of a canal to link the Atlantic and Pacific oceans. The president had initially concluded an arrangement with Columbia for American rights to construct a canal across Panama (at that time part of Columbia). Columbia balked at the deal, demanding a larger sum of money from the U.S. in return for a canal agreement. The president thereupon encouraged a Panamanian revolt against Columbia and sent an American gunboat to stop any move by Columbia to keep Panama under its control. With Panama effectively an independent nation, the United States offered limited diplomatic recognition, and in return signed a treaty with the new country providing for American construction of a canal, and American control over the Canal Zone on either side. The president remained unapologetic for the manner in which the U.S. had obtained rights to build the canal, and later boasted, "I took the Isthmus."

Despite Roosevelt’s aggressive style of governing in both domestic and foreign affairs—or because of them—he enjoyed a considerable amount of popularity with the American people and was overwhelmingly elected to a full term in 1904. In a decision he regretted years later if not immediately thereafter, he decided that he would not run in 1908. Although Roosevelt had become president due to the death of William McKinley, getting elected in 1908 would have broken the precedent set by George Washington of only serving two terms. That year, the president’s support for the Republican presidential nomination went to William Howard Taft. Taft, who had served in several government positions including governor of the Philippines, was also a friend of Roosevelt’s. Taft won the election, largely due to Roosevelt’s continuing popularity.

Roosevelt, confident that his policies would be safeguarded by his successor, left the presidency in 1909 and embarked on a hunting trip to Africa, later publishing an account of his adventures. Taft, meanwhile, quickly alienated progressives who had voted for him believing that he would promote reform the way Roosevelt had done. With Republican progressives threatening to bolt the party if Taft was re-nominated in 1912, and with the friendship between Taft and Roosevelt disintegrating due to political disagreements, the former president decided to make another presidential run in 1912.

Roosevelt’s attempt to win the 1912 Republican presidential nomination failed, due to Taft’s control of the party and the newly-formed Progressive (or "Bull Moose") Party nominated the former president as their candidate. Roosevelt fared better at the polls than Taft, but the split in Republican Party ranks between the two led to the narrow victory of Democrat Woodrow Wilson.

In his final years, Roosevelt remained highly visible, publishing his memoirs and traveling in South America. World War I began in August 1914, and Roosevelt became one of the leading voices of the "preparedness" movement, sharply criticizing President Wilson’s neutrality policy. Wilson declined an offer by Roosevelt to lead a military division to fight in France, but the war still exacted an unfortunate cost from the former president after American entry into the war, when his son Quentin was killed in France in 1918. In January 1919, at only sixty years of age, Roosevelt died in his sleep.

The Budner Roosevelt collection is divided into nine series. Series 1 contains correspondence (both original and copies) from Theodore Roosevelt and members of his family. Some of the letters in this series are handwritten and signed by Roosevelt, and others are typed with his signature. Most of these letters date from the late 1890s through the early 1900s. In addition, correspondence from Edith Roosevelt, the Roosevelt children, and Eleanor Roosevelt are included.

Due to the historical value of the letters written and signed by President Roosevelt and members of his family, these items have been arranged into their own series. However, users should note that correspondence (on the Budners’ collection, Theodore Roosevelt Association events, etc.) can be found elsewhere in the collection.

Series 2 includes Roosevelt ephemera: White House and inauguration invitations, commemorative stamps, materials from the 1912 Progressive Party convention, napkins and matchbooks on which Roosevelt’s name/image appear, and related items. Oversize items in this series include magazine covers with cartoons of Roosevelt, a ballot from the 1904 presidential election, songbooks for musical scores written about Roosevelt, and advertisements featuring his image.

Series 3 contains realia that the Budners acquired that commemorate Roosevelt, such as teddy bears, a metal coin bank, decanters, plaques and plates with his likeness on them. This series also holds several documentaries and interviews about Roosevelt on VHS and cassette tapes.

Series 4 is the largest grouping of material within the Budner collection. In addition to collecting books and pamphlets on Roosevelt and his era, the Budners also acquired periodicals, most of which date from the time period during which T.R. was president. Due to the large number of periodicals in the collection, they have been divided into subseries based on the type of articles on Roosevelt that they contain.

The president was a prodigious writer, and Subseries 1 contains magazines with articles—on politics, world events, nature, and his world travels—written by him. Subseries 2 holds periodicals that feature articles on Roosevelt, or articles that includes major mentions of him. Subseries 3 includes magazines with articles on significant national and world events during the early 1900s; periodicals with articles and photo spreads on the Roosevelt family are arranged in Subseries 4.

All oversize magazines and newspapers are grouped in Subseries 5. To maintain consistency with the method of division of the regular-size periodicals, the magazines in Subseries 5 are further divided into sub-subseries, depending on their content: Sub-subseries 1 holds oversize periodicals with articles written by Roosevelt, sub-subseries 2 with articles on Roosevelt, and so on. Newspaper editions that the Budners saved are also included in subseries 5, and this material is arranged according to publication. Miscellaneous periodicals are placed in Subseries 6.

Material on the Budners, the acquisition of their collection, and correspondence regarding to their interest in Theodore Roosevelt, are found in Series 5. Book and autograph catalogs, correspondence, wish lists, and invoices related to items the Budners purchased, or were considering purchasing, are also included. Correspondence from friends, historians, other Roosevelt enthusiasts, and Presidents George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton, recognizing them for their historical interests, are arranged in this series as well. The Budners’ own card catalog for their collection is also included here.

The Budners were members of the Theodore Roosevelt Association, and papers from that organization are contained in Series 6. The material in this series includes some issues of the Theodore Roosevelt Association journal, correspondence from other members, materials related to the planning of meetings, budgets and other financial statements for the organization, and internal material such as membership lists, governing documents, and planning.

Series 7 contains programs, announcements, and correspondence related to Roosevelt-related exhibitions, events, and historic sites. DeGolyer Library at Southern Methodist University hosted two exhibits on Roosevelt, featuring items from the Budners’ collection, in 1988 and 1998; this series includes exhibit catalogues and pamphlets. Other material in this series includes announcements and correspondence on the launching and commissioning of the USS Theodore Roosevelt, booklets published by the Lyndon B. Johnson Presidential Library for a Roosevelt exhibit, and pamphlets, tickets, and other material from Roosevelt historic sites in New York City; Oyster Bay, Long Island; and Medora, North Dakota.

Series 8 includes miscellaneous material on Roosevelt. Copies of Mr. Budner’s M.A. thesis on Roosevelt are arranged in this series, as are some news clippings, images, information on his life and presidency, and bibliographies of books and articles on Roosevelt and his era.

Series 9 is made up of miscellaneous information that did not fit anywhere else in the collection, including newspaper clippings that the Budners saved. Most of the article clippings discuss or at least mention Roosevelt, but much of the rest of this series is not related to him.

Users of this collection should note that the DeGolyer Library also holds the Budner collection of photographs of Roosevelt. The photographs are arranged in two collections (under two accession numbers), and a few prints and engravings are included. The photographs mostly relate to his activities and travels as president. A detailed listing of these items is not included here, but this material is open for research use; the accession numbers for the Roosevelt photographs are included at the beginning of this finding aid. Users may contact the DeGolyer Library for further information on this part of the Budner Roosevelt collection.

Users should also note that the DeGolyer retains Mr. Budner’s collection of Roosevelt books and pamphlets. These items—old and new biographies of Roosevelt, published collections of primary source materials such as T.R.’s letters, books on American life and politics during the Roosevelt era, campaign pamphlets on his life and career, and reprints of speeches—are not listed individually here. Users of the Budner collection may consult the SMU Central Libraries online catalog for these and other published material on Theodore Roosevelt. Users may also contact the DeGolyer Library for further information.

Series 1:Roosevelt Correspondence

NOTE: The following items 1-54 are housed separately from the rest of the Budner Roosevelt collection, under DeGolyer acquisition number A1998.2200c.

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Item 1: Letter from Roosevelt to Henry A. Smythe (?); December 27, 1867. Letter regarding the expected appointment of a man named Hicks. Written and signed on Roosevelt & Son letterhead.

Item 2: Letter from Roosevelt to Kermit (Roosevelt?); December 30, 1867. Letter asks for Kermit’s "informal" opinion on a Congress-related matter. Written and signed twice on Roosevelt and Son letterhead.

Item 3: Letter from Roosevelt to Phillip; July 2, 1891. Letter thanks him for sending a letter and indicates that Roosevelt will return it after making a copy. Written and signed on U.S. Civil Service Commission letterhead.

Item 4: Letter from Roosevelt to R.W. Pike in Chicago; June 29, 1892. Letter thanks Pike for his letter and memorandum on rifles and laments that Roosevelt has so little time for hunting. Typed and signed on U.S. Civil Service Commission letterhead.

Item 5: Letter from Roosevelt to General O’Beirne in New York City; April 6, 1895. Letter is regarding affairs about the position of police commissioner, for which Roosevelt does not feel able to provide details in the letter. Typed and signed on U.S. Civil Service Commission letterhead.

Item 6: Letter from Roosevelt to Hamilton Fish in Albany; 1896 (unclear which month). Letter on an anticipated meeting between the two; Roosevelt wants to talk about Republican Party matters, but will not do so if the others attending the meeting are not Republicans. Typed and signed on New York Police Department letterhead; letter includes corrections.

Item 7: Letter from Anna Roosevelt (?) to Mr. Riis; 1897 (month unclear). Letter conveys Mrs. Roosevelt’s wishes that Mr. Riis could join Theodore Roosevelt for lunch. Written and signed on 689 Madison Avenue letterhead on a card with monogram.

Item 8: Letter from Roosevelt to John W. Green in Kittery, Maine; June 23, 1897. Letter informs Green of his appointment "on probation" as ship keeper at the navy yard in Portsmouth, New Hampshire and asks him to report to the commandant of the navy yard as soon as possible. Typed and signed on Navy Department letterhead.

Item 9: Letter from Roosevelt to Edwin T. Pollock in Mount Gilead, Ohio; August 3, 1897. Letter instructs him to report to the superintendent of the U.S. Naval Academy at Annapolis. Typed and signed on Navy Department letterhead.

Item 10: Letter from Roosevelt to Colonel William Sanger in Madison Square, New York; November 26, 1897. Letter hopes the colonel could come to Washington, as Roosevelt would like him to meet with one or two presidential advisors. Typed and signed on Navy Department letterhead.

Item 11: Letter from Roosevelt to Colonel William Sanger; December 1, 1897. Roosevelt asks if Sanger could meet with him for lunch at the Metropolitan Club and requests that John Addison Porter attend. Typed and signed on Navy Department letterhead.

Item 12: Letter from Roosevelt to Dudley Dean in Boston; December 16, 1898. Letter indicates an enclosed item and praises Dean. Typed and signed on Republican State Committee letterhead.

Item 13: Letter from Roosevelt to George B. Sloan in Oswego, New York; December 16, 1898. Letter thanks Sloan for his suggestions. Typed and signed on Republican State Committee letterhead.

Item 14: Letter from Roosevelt to Robert McMurdy in Chicago; January 18, 1899. Reply to McMurdy’s letter. Letter states that Roosevelt had not had any time to write an article. Typed and signed on State of New York letterhead.

Item 15: Letter from Roosevelt to D.P. Witter in Richford, New York; November 13, 1899. Letter expresses Roosevelt’s interest in and agreement with Witter’s recent report on Massachusetts and New Jersey. Typed and signed on State of New York letterhead; letter also includes envelope.

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Item 16: Letter from Roosevelt to J. Morchauser in Poughkeepsie, New York; March 3, 1900. Letter regards the issue of young women being sent to House of the Good Shepherd instead of the Albany County Penitentiary. Typed and signed on State of New York letterhead.

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Item 17: Souvenir book from a dinner given for Vice President Theodore Roosevelt; March 22, 1901. The booklet includes the menu, vaudeville and music program, and pages at the end for autographs. Signed by Theodore Roosevelt.

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Item 18: Letter from Roosevelt to A.G. Wallihan in Lay, Colorado; May 9, 1901. Letter acknowledges receiving Wallihan’s letter, but also states that Roosevelt has not received certain photographs from Denver. Roosevelt says he agrees to write an introduction for a book written by Wallihan. Typed and signed on vice presidential letterhead; letter also includes envelope.

Item 19: Letter from Roosevelt to Christine Walton Dunlap in Washington, D.C.; February 12, 1906. Roosevelt asserts that he supports Mrs. Dunlap’s efforts to restore the McLean farmhouse at Appomattox and wishes her success. Typed and signed on White House letterhead.

Item 20: Photograph of President Theodore Roosevelt with a handwritten note and signature; April 14, 1908. Note is addressed to the Friends’ School, where his children attended.

Item 21: Letter from Roosevelt to Rev. Roland Cotton Smith in Washington, D.C.; December 21, 1908. Roosevelt says that he had read Smith’s sermon, "The Call for Sampson," and thanked him for preaching it. Typed and signed with a handwritten note from Roosevelt on White House letterhead; letter corrections and pamphlet with sermon included.

Item 22: Letter from Roosevelt to Rev. Roland Cotton Smith in Washington, D.C.; February 25, 1909. Roosevelt thanks Smith for the two books he sent on Africa. Typed and signed with a handwritten note from Roosevelt on White House letterhead; letter also includes envelope.

Item 23: Letter to Roosevelt from Consuelo Marlborough; 1910 (indicated date on letter in pencil). Letter hopes that the Roosevelts could come for dinner during their stay in London. Written and signed on Sunderland House, Mayfair letterhead.

Item 24: Letter to Roosevelt from Edward Gray (?); May (?) 19, 1910. Gray hopes that Roosevelt could call upon him for lunch or breakfast during his day in London. Written and signed on black-bordered Foreign Office letterhead; also included is a black-bordered card from Marlborough House, Pall Mall, S.W., from Henry of Prussia (?), undated, stating that he is lunching with family, but will call at 3 p.m.

Item 25: Letter from Roosevelt to B.F. Daniels in Kansas City; August 8, 1910. Roosevelt thanks him for their meeting in New York. Typed and signed on "Outlook" letterhead; letter includes corrections and envelope.

Item 28: Manuscript of Roosevelt’s speech in Omaha; September 2, 1910. Typed, with handwritten note from E.J. Burkett (?) indicating that this is the copy of the speech that Roosevelt read from; also included is one page of a possible draft portion of the speech (10 pgs total).

Item 29: Letter from Roosevelt to Curtis Guild, Jr. in Boston; December 13, 1910. The letter talks about an apparent speaking engagement or other obligation that Roosevelt is considering; Roosevelt suggests that, because he has so little time, he may not be able to fulfill Curtis’ request. Typed and signed on "Outlook" letterhead.

Item 30: Letter from Roosevelt to B.F. Daniels in Tucson; January 31, 1911. Roosevelt compliments Daniels’ wife on her handwriting, states that he is unable to stop in Tucson. Typed and signed on "Outlook" letterhead; letter corrections included.

Item 31: Letter from Roosevelt to Richard Washburn Child in Boston; September 5, 1911. Letter states that Roosevelt is unable to fulfill Child’s (unspecified) request. Typed and signed on "Outlook" letterhead; letter includes corrections.

Item 32: Letter from Roosevelt to B.F. Daniels in Tucson; November 30, 1914. Roosevelt expresses regret at Daniels’ losing an election for the position of sheriff, and refers to the assassination attempt (against Roosevelt) in Milwaukee. Typed and signed on Theodore Roosevelt letterhead.

Item 33: Letter from Roosevelt to Hamilton Fish, Jr. in Albany; March 22, 1915. Roosevelt talks about—in his view—the undermining of a workmen’s compensation bill in New York and criticizes the legislation then under consideration. Typed and signed on Oyster Bay letterhead.

Item 34: Letter from Roosevelt to John C. Doxsee in Islip, Long Island; April 2, 1915. Roosevelt apparently declines a lecture invitation, brief reference to national defense. Typed and signed on Oyster Bay letterhead; letter includes corrections.

Item 35: Letter from Theodore Roosevelt to Edmund Allen Burnham in Syracuse; May 12, 1915. Roosevelt mentions Billy Sunday, and says that he will read an issue of the "Congregationalist," presumably given to him by Burnham. Typed and signed.

Item 36: Two checks signed by Roosevelt. One from the North Shore Bank in Oyster Bay, New York; February 9, 1916. The other check from the Riggs National Bank in Washington, D.C.; March 2, 1909.

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Item 37: Letter from Roosevelt to Mabel Simpson in Mission, Texas; April 7, 1916. Roosevelt thanks her for her letter. Typed and signed on "Metropolitan" letterhead; also included are a letter and envelope to Lawrence Budner from Tommie (Mabel) Simpson Lumby on the letter she had written to, and the reply she had received from, Roosevelt.

Item 38: Letter from Roosevelt to H.B. Smith in Denver; January 26, 1917. Roosevelt regretfully declines a speaking invitation. Typed and signed on "Metropolitan" letterhead.

Item 39: Letter from Roosevelt to Thomas J. O’Brien in Grand Rapids, Michigan; June 6, 1917. Roosevelt agrees that a Japanese army should be sent to help the Russians and says that he would not go on any diplomatic missions. Roosevelt states what his contribution in a war would be: "I want to serve it in the firing line." Typed and signed on "Metropolitan" letterhead; letter includes corrections.

Item 40: Letter from Roosevelt to Belle; February 1, 1918. Roosevelt regrets that he has been unable to join Mrs. Roosevelt in visiting the couple, but promises to do so next time. Written and signed on Sagamore Hill letterhead.

Item 41: Letter from Roosevelt to Dr. William C. Ward of Newark; November 20, 1918. Roosevelt comments on recent armistice. Typed and signed on "Kansas City Star" letterhead; also includes letter from Ward to Roosevelt on the armistice, which thanks him for his "constant vigilance for the welfare of the nation (this letter is typed with no signature); also includes a printed card from Mrs. Roosevelt.

Item 42: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to E.A. Fitzgerald; August 4, 1928. Mrs. Roosevelt thanks Mr. Fitzgerald for his letter and comments on her late son, Quentin (?). Written and signed on Sagamore Hill letterhead; letter also includes envelope and printed card/envelope with Mrs. Roosevelt’s name.

Item 43: Letter from Eleanor Roosevelt to Mrs. Thomas H. Dowd in Salamanca, New York; November 16, 1928. Mrs. Roosevelt thanks Mrs. Dowd for her letter and refers to Franklin Roosevelt’s recent election as governor of New York and their impending move to Albany. Typed and signed on Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt letterhead; letter includes envelope.

Item 44: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Dr. Morgan; February 7 (no year given). Mrs. Roosevelt asks if Dr. Morgan would be available to come to dinner and notes that the eyesight of one of her sons ("Ted") has improved since he started wearing glasses given to him by Dr. Morgan, indicating he has not had any headaches since he started wearing them. Written and signed on State of New York, Executive Mansion letterhead.

Item 45: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Mrs. Osborn; March 29 (no year given). Mrs. Roosevelt thanks her for a gift (handwriting is difficult). Written and signed on Sagamore Hill letterhead.

Item 46: Western Union telegram from Roosevelt to E.J. Burkett of Lincoln, Nebraska; July 8 (no year given). Roosevelt states that he cannot speak at Lincoln, but will be in Fargo and Omaha.

Item 47: Western Union telegram from Roosevelt to E.J. Burkett of Lincoln, Nebraska; July 20 (possibly 1910). Telegram regards the group Roosevelt will address in Omaha.

Item 48: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Miss Langstaff (?); Friday (no date given). Mrs. Roosevelt notes that she and her husband will be unable to attend Miss Langstaff’s social function, due to a previous engagement in Albany. Written and signed on Executive Mansion, Albany letterhead.

Item 49: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Rev. Roland Cotton Smith; Monday (no date given). Mrs. Roosevelt sends a brief note to Rev. Smith, noting that she had forgotten "yesterday’s collection." Written and signed on White House letterhead; letter includes 3 envelopes: original stamped envelope, one with his name, and one with his name and address.

Item 50: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Rev. Roland Cotton Smith; December 1 (no year given). Mrs. Roosevelt encloses a clipping and cites a quote from Mrs. Browning (Elizabeth Barrett?). She also asks for a copy of a sermon and refers to a book she is reading. Written and signed on White House letterhead; letter includes envelope.

Item 51: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Rev. Roland Cotton Smith (no date given). The letter notes Rev. Smith’s absence from church recently and indicates that he had gone to Boston on some type of personal matter. Mrs. Roosevelt writes that she hopes for good news; the letter seems to refer to a death (perhaps a child’s). Written and signed on White House letterhead.

Item 52: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Rev. Roland Cotton Smith (no date given). Mrs. Roosevelt asks for a copy of Rev. Smith’s sermon from the previous Sunday, as members of her family who did not hear it would like to read it. Written and signed on White House letterhead; also includes a note card to Rev. Smith from Ethel (?) Carrow Roosevelt, saying that she was asked to attend the church service on Good Friday and inquires as to whether Rev. Smith could come as well.

Item 53: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Miss Marshall; February 9 (no year given). The note asks that Mrs. Roosevelt’s son, Archie, be excused for his absence from school due to illness. Written and signed on White House letterhead; letter includes envelope.

Item 54: Letter from Edith Roosevelt to Miss Marshall; December 21 (no year given). Mrs. Roosevelt thanks Miss Marshall for her note and discusses the academic progress of her son, Archie. The note also conveys Mrs. Roosevelt’s best wishes to Miss Marshall for the coming year. Written and signed on White House letterhead; letter also includes 3 envelopes, one printed card with Mrs. Roosevelt’s name, and a scrap of paper, possibly of Archibald (Archie) Roosevelt’s handwriting.

NOTE: The remainder of the material in the Budner collection is listed below, beginning with Box 1, under DeGolyer acquisition number A1998.2200.

Box

Folder

1

1

Photocopies of letters to and from Theodore Roosevelt, 1880s-1910s.

2

Correspondence from William Loeb, secretary to President Roosevelt, 1905-1908.

Roosevelt, Theodore. "American Game in New Zealand." Field and Stream, June 1927. (unsure whether this is an reprint of an article by Roosevelt, or an article published under the name of his son, Theodore Roosevelt III)

20

Roosevelt, Theodore. "‘Steward, Four More of the Same’—A Story." Scribner’s, May 1928. (unsure whether this is an reprint of an article by Roosevelt, or an article published under the name of his son, Theodore Roosevelt III)

21

Roosevelt, Theodore. "The 1900’s: In the Louisiana Canebrakes." Scribner’s, January 1937. (article originally published in 1908)

22

Roosevelt, Theodore. "Fellow-Feeling as a Political Factor." Kettering Review, Fall 1984. (article originally published in 1900)

23

Miscellaneous articles.

Subseries 2: Periodicals with Articles on Roosevelt

Box

Folder

17

24

"Roosevelt’s The Winning of the West." Atlantic Monthly, November 1889. (book review)

Coker, William S. "The Panama Canal Tolls Controversy: A Different Perspective;" Daniel J. Kevles, "Testing the Army’s Intelligence: Psychologists and the Military in World War I;" and John B. Duff, "The Versailles Treaty and the Irish-Americans." Journal of American History vol. LV, no. 3 (December 1968), 555-564; 565-581; and 582-598, respectively.

"The President’s Daughter Puzzles Her Father." Ladies’ Home Journal, April 1905.

11

Day, William A. "The Young Lady of the White House." Ladies’ World, June 1908.

Sub-Subseries 5: Miscellaneous oversize periodicals

Box

Folder

33 (oversize)

2

Ev’ry Month, November 1, 1895.

Christian Herald, January 8, 1902.

Saturday Evening Post, December 13, 1902.

Box

Folder

33 (oversize)

3

Success, December 1904.

Christian Herald, August 16, 1905.

Puck, September 11, 1907.

Box

Folder

33 (oversize)

4

Saturday Evening Post, February 24, 1912.

American Hebrew, June 1, 1928.

Sportsman, February 1934.

Box

Folder

33 (oversize)

5

Fortune, May 1943.

Parade, July 20, 1997.

Box

Folder

37 (oversize)

12

Harper’s, December 21, 1895.

Subseries 6: Newspapers

Note: This subseries is organized in two different ways. Newspapers with major content related to President McKinley’s death, Roosevelt’s swearing-in as president, and Roosevelt’s death are grouped first, in chronological order.

Following are other newspaper issues that feature Roosevelt, and some that are from the general Roosevelt era, but do not mention him extensively; these are grouped by name of newspaper, in alphabetical order.

Binder with items in the Budner collection, divided by type: First-edition works by Roosevelt, biographies, related works, etc. Also includes lists of items that Budner wanted to add to the collection.